We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience. If you continue to use our website we will take this to mean that you agree to our use of cookies. If you want to find out more, please view our cookie policy. Accept and Hide [x]

Super injunctions go supernova – The Human Rights Roundup

It’s time for the human rights roundup, a regular bulletin of all the law we haven’t quite managed to feature in full blog posts. The full list of links, updated each day, can be found here.

by Melinda Padron

In the news

It can safely be said that the topic of “super injunctions” has received a lot of media coverage, perhaps second only to the royal wedding.

Firstly the outrage seen in tabloid newspapers and news broadcasts alike was caused by the two injunctions which gagged the media from reporting on the extra marital affairs of an actor and of a footballer. Then adding to the controversy was the decision of the former “gagger” Andrew Marr to break the terms of his own injunction and reveal himself as being responsible from preventing the reporting of his own extra marital affair.

Even David Cameron felt the need to make a statement to express his uneasiness about a privacy law being developed by the courts when it is a task to be dealt with by Parliament. In response to that statement, Peter Willby wrote an excellent article arguing that the press and Parliament need to change their focus from criticising how the courts have had to handle right to privacy issues by the use of super, hyper and possibly even-larger-still injunctions. Willby says that Parliament should instead “get on with [its] job” and provide for a statutory framework, and that the press should be more concerned with providing some constructive support to Parliament in this process.

It is interesting to note that what the press has been referring to as “super injunctions” are in fact ordinary injunctions with an anonymity provision. If the cases they referred to last week involved “super injunctions” (which are reported to be dead), the press would not even have been allowed to report their existence.

Last week’s debate over right to privacy served to remind us not only of the importance of publicity in the achievement of justice, but also of the tension between this value and responsible journalism. The legal blogs have shone during this debate, with detailed and thoughtful coverage which often could not be found in the main stream media.

Lucy Series wrote a great post on The Small Places blog about family and court of protection cases, where this tension is perhaps most evident. For those who want an insight into this new law on the right to privacy, Hugh Tomlinson QC’s three posts which we have reposted from Inforrm’s Blog provide a great outline, an interesting historical background to the law as it stands and a discussion of options for the future.

Carl Gardner’s Head of Legal blog has been consistently challenging John Hemming MP’s campaign against what he calls “hyper” injunctions, and Hemming has repeatedly commented on Gardner’s posts. The most recent post asking whether Hemming has been abusing parliamentary procedure, is here.

Family law barrister Lucy Reed has also posted on Hemming’s actions in the context of his campaign against secret family justice. Her detailed post is well worth a read.

Bill of rights rumbles on

Also in the news last week was the issue of human rights reforms. Nick Barber attempted to establishwhich out of three models the Bill of Rights Commission is supposed to be: if a forum to reach political compromise; a body representing the UK people’s opinion on the HRA’s reform; or a scholarly and empirically driven report on the functioning of the HRA. Kenneth Clark announced that he will be arguing during a Council of Europe conference on the future of the European Court of Human Rights his support to an court which is more deferential to genuine differences of national approach. The tabloid the Sun found a new target in the tirade against European human rights: “greedy [human rights] lawyers”.

Finally, the Panopticon blog reports on an appeal by the All Party Parliamentary Group on Extraordinary Rendition to the Upper Tribunal succeeded in achieving the disclosure of, or significantly more information from the Ministry of Defence on the following: memoranda of understanding between the UK and the governments of Iraq, Afghanistan and the USA regarding the treatment of prisoners detained in the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan; a copy of the Detentions Practices Review; and statistics on detainees held in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Catholic Care loses appeal against refusal of permission to amend charitable objects to not offer adoption to same sex couples. Discrimination not permitted under Equality Act 2010. This is one of the reported 50 cases being fought by the Christian Legal Centre in US inspired tactic against ‘sidelining’ of people with ‘traditional biblical views’. Our post coming soon on this.

Extradition of alleged murder to France was lawful. Judge right to proceed in absence of defendant, risk of suicide not sufficient to prevent extradition. Interesting issue on link between article 8 and “oppression”.

Court of appeal sends Zimbabwean asylum case back to tribunal as need more evidence as to whether they would have to lie about political beliefs. Odd obiter points at para 11. See our previous post on asylum seekers and whether they should be forced to hide their (absence of) political beliefs.

Share:

Like this:

1 comment;

“Kenneth Clark announced that he will be arguing during a Council of Europe conference on the future of the European Court of Human Rights his support to an court which is more deferential to genuine differences of national approach”.

There appears to be a difference between the MoJ press release (certainly the Daily Mail and Daily Telegraph interpretation of it) and the speech Kenneth Clarke gave at the Izir Conference.

Kenneth Clarke appears to be focusing just on reform of the ECtHR and missing the point that one of the challenges faced by the ECtHR is a failure by some Member States to fully comply with its judgments.

In his speech Kenneth Clarke stated:

“But most fundamentally, the British government thinks that we need to reaffirm that it is individual States and their courts which have primary responsibility for implementing the Convention and granting effective remedies for any violation. In this way, we ensure that our citizens can take full ownership of their rights”.

This is in accordance with the view of the Council of Europe, Court and other Member States. However, there is a clash between the subsidiarity principle and the idea of sovereignty. Unless the UK fully accepts that human rights are universal, and that means that there is no place for a British Bill of Rights of a lesser standard the UK is heading for a clash with Strasbourg and Brussels and the UN.

Disclaimer

This blog is maintained for information purposes only. It is not intended to be a source of legal advice and must not be relied upon as such. Blog posts reflect the views and opinions of their individual authors, not of chambers as a whole.

Our privacy policy can be found on our ‘subscribe’ page or by clicking here.

Disclaimer: This blog is maintained for information purposes only. It is not intended to be a source of legal advice and must not be relied upon as such. Blog posts reflect the views and opinions of their individual authors, not of chambers as a whole.